ok, i got a question on this then....."if pc's are so powerful (rolls eyes) how can a tablet run a game like this?!? Or a tablets that powerful?!" EDIT....@frelyler. "Oooooo.....i see, thank you" so is cloud gaming is doing all the work! hummm.....then cloud gaming also looks like it will be the future for some pc's, and whatever the new ps4 and xbox will come out with. "and thanks again"

Well, the tablet is using something akin to onlive. The game is on a cloud, which is being run by one of those powerful pcs you rolled your eyes at. It is still very cool, but the tablet itself is not doing the actual work.

I can play Skyrim on my Iphone using the app Splashtop (there are many others just like it.) Instant access to my home pc over 3g or wifi. I just need a bluetooth mouse and keyboard and I will be good to go :P

Even if you can use a controller with it, it just doesn't sound so wise to play a game on a tablet to me.

Let's assume that you can connect a wireless controller to the device. When it is the case, the tablet itself will only be used as a monitor. Think about it, you'll be playing a game on a monitor that is horrendously small and low-res. Why would you do that? I'd probably just grab my PS3/Xbox360 controller instead and play the game on my gorgeous Full HD LED screen.

Yeah I know regular consoles are not portable and stuff but if you're considering the fact that you may want to carry a gaming device with you when you travel, why wouldn't you just stick with the Vita instead? The screen is smaller but at least you don't have to carry an external controller with you.

Tablets are not meant to play games with, they're for accessing to internet easily any time you want to. Only games you can enjoy playing on a tablet device are touch games like Angry Birds or Fruit Ninja.

People with money to throw around, and people who don't know any better, are the ones that get tablets for "gaming."

A tablet's primary purpose is internet browsing and such, things that are best done with a touch screen. And they're an evolution of the smartphone, in my opinion... or somewhere between a smartphone and a laptop. In either case, the tablet's greatest strengths are its touchscreen technology and portability.

The former is not very well suited to the core gaming experience- not on its own, anyway; the DS series and the Vita show, however, that it can be quite effective when traditional controls are included- and the latter is not as effective as a dedicated gaming handheld.

Gamers know this, and gamers want dedicated handhelds to play on, primarily. So no, "everyone" does not want a tablet, at least not for gaming.